Talking about it, or doing something about it. That's our choice.
Well done is better than well said
Benjamin Franklin
In my four
score years and two, I have seen one consistency: lots of talk, little action.
When I was a
reporter in Grand Haven back in the 60s and 70s, I could provide the names of
people who would attend every city council meeting. These people were
exceptionally knowledgeable not only about the workings of the city, but its
many problems. They would expound on these matters in local coffee shops, and
write letters in the local newspaper. But they never did anything. For all I
know, they may not even have been registered voters.
All talk, no
action.
50 years
later I’m in the prisoner advocacy business. Similar experiences.
As Matt and
I left a two-hour meeting 7 or 8 years ago, we decided never again! We knew
that those attending this meeting were exceptionally knowledgeable and vocal
about corrections issues and problems. But we could see beyond that meeting. Nothing
was going to come of it. And it didn’t.
I see that
as a major problem today---right now---at several different levels.
I see and
feel it in the organized church, where people have lots of criticism, but won’t
lift a finger to do anything about it.
Local
government still faces the challenges it did back then. Many people know what
should be done, but won’t step up to the plate.
In HFP’s work
with prisoners, we face all kinds of issues of injustice, cruelty, racism,
wrongful conviction, prisoner abuse, exorbitant sentences, unfair rules and
regulations. Experts study these matters, write papers about them, give
speeches about them, publish articles about them, but I’m here to tell you: Despite
all the talk, the wheels of progress and change are barely rolling.
On the
national level, the people of this nation so far this year have tolerated an
average of 1.4 mass shootings a day. Following last weekend’s carnage, once
again everyone’s talking. Besides “thoughts and prayers,” we’re pointing
fingers at people and problems. Tune in to any news channel or newscast, and
you’ll hear experts who know exactly what the problems are. And that’s precisely where
everything stops.
I promise
you, in a few days, we’ll hear reports of another shooting. There was no
caboose on those in El Paso and Dayton. Sadly, there’ll be more thoughts and
prayers, more rhetoric, and more talk about what should be done.
From issues
on the lowest level to the highest level, lots of words, not much action.
Said
Leonardo da Vinci: "I have been impressed with the urgency of doing.
Knowing is not enough; we must apply. Being willing is not enough; we must
do."
Talk doesn’t cook rice
~Chinese Proverb
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